'It's personal': Elizabeth Warren says President Biden has the 'legal authority'...
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Elizabeth Warren says President Biden has the 'legal authority' to cancel student loan debt — and she's calling for action right now. But will it actually happen?
first want to start off
As millions of borrowers anxiously await the Supreme Court’s decision on Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan this week, one U.S. senator believes the path forward is already obvious.
"Let me be very clear, President Biden has the legal authority to cancel student-loan debt," Massachusetts Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren declared in a webinar held by several advocacy groups.
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When the president announced his plan to forgive up to $20,000 in federal student loan debt last summer, six Republican-led states challenged its validity. Borrowers have since been suspended in uncertainty for months — but are now expected to resume payments in October of this year once forbearance ends.
But Warren says the opposition’s claims are unfounded.
"If the Supreme Court follows the law instead of playing politics, they will make clear that the Republican attempt to stop student-loan debt relief is baseless, and that that relief will go forward immediately,” she said.
Why student loan forgiveness has been on the rocks
There are 40 million student borrowers across the U.S. who owe a staggering $1.6 trillion in outstanding loans and could potentially benefit from the Supreme Court’s decision this week.
The costs of attending a postsecondary institution are far higher than what they used to be — thanks to factors such as rising demand and reduced state funding — and that’s without adding inflation to the mix.
"A young person can pay up to 200% more in tuition than what her parents paid when they went to college, and that's just fundamentally wrong," Warren emphasizes.
The Biden administration implemented the Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency Solutions (HEROES) act, arguing that the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on borrowers warranted forgiveness in order to prevent a record rise in delinquencies and defaults.
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